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muso

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: musò, muŝo, and musō

English

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Etymology

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From musician +‎ -o (diminutive suffix).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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muso (plural musos)

  1. (UK, Australia, informal) diminutive of musician.
    • 2000 May 5, Justin French, “Heads up, Yes me again Mr m3a Smart mouth”, in alt.music.journalism[1] (Usenet):
      I don't expect you to understand the hours involved in becoming a talented muso, rehearsing for months, writing a hit, recording the song, marketing the band, pressing the CDs and trying to get airplay / make some record sales... but you should be able to find a similar problem in your work...
    • 2001 March 5, Gary Meadows, “Darn it!”, in aus.culture.true-blue[2] (Usenet):
      Yeah...I probably wouldn't change have changed plans anyway. I'm sure my wife and children will get more out of a family day than if we headed into the big concrete jungle (aka city) to watch a few musos.
    • 2001 March 27, Mr Q. Z. Diablo, “[long] will the real goth please stand up”, in aus.culture.gothic[3] (Usenet):
      Don't blame the musos. Blame the marketers, A&R men and record company execs. You don't imagine for a moment that musos sought to inflict Bardot, Britney and Christina on an unsuspecting public. Even the producers are only guilty of trying to feed themselves by attempting to write and execute popular songs that appeal to the LCD.
    • 2018 October 5, Ben Beaumont-Thomas, Laura Snapes, “Has 10 years of Spotify ruined music?”, in The Guardian[4]:
      It is a badge of pride for musos to say that Spotify’s machine-learning algorithms – when you listen to a track and it recommends things you might also like – don’t cover their cosmopolitan taste.

Anagrams

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Bambara

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Pronunciation

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  • \mù.so\

Noun

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muso

  1. woman
  2. wife

Derived terms

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Catalan

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Verb

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muso

  1. first-person singular present indicative of musar

Esperanto

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Etymology

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From Indo-European languages, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *muh₂s.

The computing sense is a semantic loan from English mouse.

Pronunciation

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muso (ronĝulo)

Noun

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muso (accusative singular muson, plural musoj, accusative plural musojn)

  1. mouse (rodent of the genus Mus)
    Hypernym: ronĝulo
    Hyponyms: musido, musino
    Holonym: musaro

Derived terms

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komputila muso

Noun

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muso (accusative singular muson, plural musoj, accusative plural musojn)

  1. (computing) mouse (computer input device)

Derived terms

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Ido

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Esperanto muso, English mouse, German Maus, Russian мышь (myšʹ), all ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *muh₂s.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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muso (plural musi)

  1. mouse (rodent)
  2. (computing) mouse

Italian

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Etymology

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Inherited from Late Latin mūsus (muzzle), of uncertain etymology but probably expressive of the shape of protruded lips and/or influenced by Latin mūgīre (to moo, bellow). Cognates include Old Spanish and Lombard mus and muson, Middle French musel, English muzzle. Not related to Spanish morro (hill; muzzle), Occitan morre (hill; muzzle), Provençal mourre (muzzle; rock).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈmu.zo/
  • Rhymes: -uzo
  • Hyphenation: mù‧so

Noun

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muso m (plural musi, diminutive musino)

  1. muzzle (of an animal)
  2. (derogatory) mug, face (of a person)
  3. nose (of an aircraft)
  4. front (of a car etc.)
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Further reading

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Anagrams

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Spanish

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Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈmuso/ [ˈmu.so]
  • Rhymes: -uso
  • Syllabification: mu‧so

Etymology 1

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From Latin musa.

Noun

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muso m (plural musos)

  1. muse

Etymology 2

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Verb

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muso

  1. only used in me muso, first-person singular present indicative of musirse

Further reading

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Venetan

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Alternative forms

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  • mussotraditional orthography

Etymology

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Cognate with Friulian mus, Ladin müsc as well as Ladin musciat. This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈmu.so/
  • Hyphenation: mù‧so

Noun

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muso m (plural musi)

  1. donkey, ass
    Synonym: àxeno

Derived terms

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Yoruba

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Pronunciation

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Interjection

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músò

  1. hooray, an expression used to denote happiness or joy.